Also known as Psycho Sisters and The Sibling, this would-be Hitchcockian thriller might have passed
muster as a TV movie or an episode of, say, Night
Gallery. Presented as a proper feature, it’s woefully insufficient. The
characterizations are shallow, the story is far-fetched, and the suspense
scenes are underwhelming. So while some of the acting meets baseline
professional standards, the silly script undercuts the performances. After a
jumbled opening sequence involving a car crash, a police chase, and the
revelation of a murky criminal conspiracy, the story proper gets underway. Following
the death of her husband, bereaved Brenda (Susan Strasberg) moves in with her
sister, Millie (Faith Domergue). Recently released from a sanitarium, Millie
has a prescription for anti-psychotic medication, and she slips her pills into
Brenda’s meals, making it easier for her to gaslight Brenda. Turns out Millie
wants Brenda declared insane so Millie can acquire wealth belonging to Brenda’s
late husband. Also thrown into the mix is a simpleton handyman who menaces
Brenda, a beach-bum stud who romances Brenda, and intrepid cops sniffing around
the situation because they detect criminal activity. Bouncing between
relatively grounded scenes of sibling rivalry and cartoonish horror-movie beats
(hallucinatory visions of corpses, etc.), the flick trudges along pointlessly
from one credibility-stretching plot twist to the next until the whole scenario
feels ridiculous. Ultimately, So Evil, My
Sister is noteworthy only as an early credit for both actor John Ashton and
cinematographer Dean Cundey, even though Cundey’s work here bears none of the
confident style one normally associates with his name.
So Evil, My Sister: LAME
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